Showing posts with label Training Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Training Tips. Show all posts

Ask The Coach #8: Training Series 3/3: The Seven Deadly Sins


In ROCK #91, you'll find my final article in my three-part training series entitled The Seven Deadly Sins. Why ROCK decided to label this article on the cover as "Just Climb It - Lee Cujes' seven awesome things" is anyone's guess.

Sidenote: With the news that Newsweek magazine will cease print at the end of the year and move to an online-only distribution, I had thoughts about the future of poor old ROCK magazine. As anyone who reads ROCK knows, it was the baby of prolific Australian climber Chris Baxter since he created the magazine in 1978. With Chris' ailing heath, the magazine was acquired by the Prime Creative Media stable in 2009. As well as producing a climbing magazine, this team also produces Global Coffee Review, Italianicious, Trailer Magazine, and many others. Initially, avid climber Ross Taylor was put in charge of producing ROCK, and he put in a valiant effort despite an obvious lack of resources. Eventually, Ross left ROCK and co-founded the excellent online publication Vertical Life, and editorial duties of ROCK fell to Prime Creative staffer and non-climber Aaron Flanagan. Once again, I have no doubt that Aaron is doing the best he can with the resources he has available, but I can't help but thinking that with the above-mentioned progression we're seeing the lid of ROCKs coffin being slowly nailed up. Perhaps it's inevitable. As Newsweek's editor said, “It really has not been a question of if, it was a question of when.”

Without further ado, please enjoy my final training article for ROCK magazine.

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to more easily read the full-size scanned pic.

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Ask The Coach #7: Training Series 2/3: Training finger strength

Autumn's issue of ROCK magazine is out and in it I get stuck into telling you how to go about training finger strength. Ideally suited to those who have perhaps tried before and given it up.

This is the second of a three-part training series and the content is something I'm proud of considering it's an area I have struggled with, and then really put in a singleminded, determined push to develop for the past six months. And it paid off. I've got miles to go, too.

So. Stronger fingers. Here's how.

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to more easily read the full-size scanned pic.
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The third and final installment of this training series will be coming up in July.

Ask The Coach #6: Training Series 1/3: Beating the pump!

In this quarter's issue of ROCK Magazine, I begin the first of a three-part training series on the main building blocks you need to address as part of a yearly training plan.

In this case, because it's the first one we're starting with the building blocks and that is ARC (Aerobic Restoration and Capillarity) training and PE (Power Endurance) training.

If you want to beat the pump, this is required reading.

Click to view bigger.
Stay tuned for parts two and three!

Mere Mortal's Guide to Beasting the Beastmaker 45° Slopers

The Beastmaker 2000 is a wooden hangboard produced by a couple of lads in the UK and is now available worldwide. It's good. I've posted about it before. My board was in the first shipment to hit Australia back in 2009.

Anyway let's get down to business. You're reading this because you are a mere mortal like me and the Beastmaker slopers feel impossible to hang.

Beastmaker 2000 has three sloper angles: 20°, 35° and 45°.

Beastmaker 2000 grip layout
I naturally favour an open-hand grip and avoid crimps (opposite of most people) so when I got my board I could immediately do a couple of chinups on the 35° slopers. Some people I coach who are good climbers struggle to even hang these. Don't worry if this is you.

In your quest for the 45° chinup, you'll need to get comfortable on the 35°'s. 

Before doing anything
  • Warm up thoroughly. If I go to my board now and try to hit the slopers I will immediately fall off. They'll feel impossible. It is vital to warm up these grips. Do some bouldering. Use easier grips like the 20° sloper. Spend 20 minutes or so building up the squeeze you're going to need.

Cheating

  • Nestling your fingers into the ridges, using your thumb, or any other kind of malarky to provide assistance is only cheating yourself. I also find that it doesn't help with progression on the slopers. Follow my guide below instead.

Grip on the 45°s
A word on grip
  • I always thought maximising the amount of skin on the wood was the key to success. However, as soon as I begun work on the 45°s, I realised that the best grip was two pads only as shown above.

Stage 1
  • 5 chinups on the 20° sloper. Should be easy for most climbers.

Stage 2 - Beasting the 35°'s
  • Deadhang the 35° slopers. If you're struggling, put one hand on the 20° and the other on the 35°. Hang this for as long as you can, then switch. You'll notice a tendency to barndoor as you do this because the grip on the 20° is much stronger than the grip on the 35°. Control this!
  • Once deadhangs are no problem, start chinups. You will find it is hardest to control the down part of the motion. Make sure you have a mat under your board as you could fall hard on your tailbone.
  • Work up to about 5 very controlled chinups (in a row). Once you're at this point you're ready for Stage 3.

Stage 3 - The Dreaded 45°s!
  • You're not going to be able to deadhang the 45°s straight away. So we are going to share grips. One hand on a 35°, the other on the 45°. Deadhang, and twirl off gracefully (you'll see what I mean). Now swap. You're building up the squeeze power on the 45°s.
  • Mixed-grip chinups. One hand on a 35°, the other on the 45°. Chinup (and down) cleanly. Swap.
  • Multiple mixed-grip chinups. One hand on a 35°, the other on the 45°. Chinup (and down) cleanly TWICE. You're now on the cusp, hang in there. Once you can do THREE of these it's time. Get the video camera.
  • Chinup the 45°s. You'll most likely slip off on the way back down. Keep at it and nail your first clean 45° chinup! FEEL THE POWER! Now update your Facebook status.



How often? How long?
  • Let motivation be your guide. One or two sessions a week, with your other climbing and training should do it. From the point when I could do a handful of clean chinups on the 35°s, I was 10 sessions away from my first 45° chinup (doing 1-2 sessions a week). I was doing a fairly standard hangboard session (crimps, pockets etc.) with slopers thrown in at the end. Your mileage may vary. Let me know if this works for you.

Board/skin prep
  • Get a big soft brush for brushing slopers between each attempt. Like a dustbin brush. Really helps.
  • Chalk up, wipe off any excess, then breathe hot warm air onto your fingers.

Humidity
  • In a stark opposite to regular rock climbing, humidity makes a HUGE difference - it's good! If it is cold and dry you are going to struggle your arse off. I did my first 45 chinup in pouring rain, 100% humidity and high temperature. I was training regularly and keeping notes, and this humidity manifested in ridiculous personal bests on the board.

Different boards
  • I am assured that well-loved boards (UK Climbing Works) are waaaay easier to use the slopers on. Oils exuding from people's skin seep into the wood and affect friction. By all accounts, The Works' board is sticky.
  • As you can imagine, 1° makes a big freakin difference. If you or someone else has installed the board on a surface that isn't exactly plumb, you're going to be in trouble, either in a good or bad way. Use an angle-finder to measure your slopers and ensure they're spot on.

If you have any other great sloper tips or frictional insights, please share in the comments.

Adam Ondra's training regime

Here's a collection of training tidbits from the world's best climber.

Adam Ondra's training regime

"I train more or less just by climbing. How simple! I train on couple of small bouldering walls, where I train endurance and bouldering power as well. I rarely climb indoor with rope because there are not good walls enough in the city. The way I train depends on what I am training for. If I am preparing for bouldering, I do just lot of hard boulders. If I train endurance I do laps. I figure out usually 20 move lap and try to climb 3 times. 60 moves are usually more than enough. [See Upskill article on circuits] Good trick how to become stronger is to use ONLY micro footholds for your feet. You work on your power and precise footwork at the same time. I do not train more than 3 days in a row."

Getting good fast

"I would not say I have become better fast. I have been getting stronger more or less the same level a year since I was 8. In my early steps in climbing I climbed just onsights and sometimes 10 routes a day."

What do you do?

"Rock – sport climbing 85%, bouldering 15%.

Plastic – most of the time I train on bouldering walls, but on these bouldering walls I train endurance as well
[see above]. I only climb indoor routes around twice a month. In winter, I climb on plastic five days a week, for two to three hours a day. During all other seasons, I usually climb on the rock, even after school and only on plastic for two weeks before the competitions."

Training partners?

"More than half of the time I train alone. If I don't train alone, I love to climb with my sister, when we're bouldering it works quite well, we only have to figure out two different variations on the problems. I also train with Martin Stranik or I sometimes go to train with Tomas Mrazek, who has a really good bouldering wall in his house."

No hangboarding, no campus-boarding?

"Yeah, I train just in winter on small bouldering walls. The only exception when I go climbing indoor is time before European Youth Series and Youth World Championship."

Fitting climbing in with school

"My training has been just climbing two hours on the wall, so still a lot of time remains for me to study something if it is essential. In fact we go climbing abroad more or less just at weekends, so I do not miss school too much. Not enormously more than my classmates. Only on the rare occasions that we go climbing for longer trips. There are usually a few hectic school days after my arrival home from such a trip, but on the other hand - what one would not do for 14 days of climbing..."

Diet and nutrition

"I care about what I eat and try eat in some healthy way and to get enough proteins and vitamins, try to think what would be good dinner for fast recovery and so on, but I do not restrict myself in amount of food. When I am hungry, I eat. I have advantage that I can really a lot and I do not put on weight.

My favourite meal is pasta with various sauces before a climbing day and fish with basmati rice or couscous before a rest day."


What does Adam recommend for other people's training?

"If they start climbing, to climb many easy routes on the rocks onsight to get good technique. It is hard to get technique when you can do 10 one-arm pull-ups. Better to train power later. For [an already] exceptional climber, it is hard to advise. It depends on what you want train. But for sure it is important to have some base."

Adam Ondra on injuries

"I have a curved spine (like all climbers), but as well mine is also curved to one side. Because of it I am training mostly on an exercise ball, specifically some exercises in order to train the muscles around my backbone. Anyway, I have been lucky with some other injuries. Once I fell quite badly under the second bolt, head-first, but fortunately the only result was a lump."

Secrets of success

"Hard to say, success depends on many factors, I think. Firstly, I have big talent for climbing and had the best conditions possible to work on my talent, thanks to my parents. I had possibility to climb outdoors all the time and to improve my technique and efficiency in climbing. Secondly, I became soon totally obsessed by climbing. If you train and climb by your heart and passion, everything goes way easier. What more? I do not know, maybe the way of my climbing (fast, efficient and, if everything is OK, precise)."

Ask The Coach #5: Mental Training

So while I was in Kalymnos running our climbing camps I had ample opportunity to do weakness assessments on a stack of climbers (self included). I kept seeing the same weaknesses popping up again and again, and most of them had nothing to do with our physical selves.

I always say it. Climbing = 80% mental.

So, I thought it was high time to address some mental training. It's an area I'm very interested in, and I reckon all climbers can make good gains simply by paying attention to what's going on upstairs.

Oh yeah, go subscribe to ROCK. It's $31.95 per year.




Climbing training tips based on YOUR level

Climbing is an incredibly complex sport. It's not like throwing a javelin. There are so many different factors that come into play and require training.

Also, it's worth remembering that what one climber sees as improvement (or success) doesn't necessarily equal improvement for another. Someone might aspire towards pure gymnastic difficulty (grades) while someone else might value variety, or volume, or style, or the social aspect of climbing or just having fun. Usually it's a combination. In the case of our coaching here at Upskill, we measure performance by the grade and volume of routes cleanly climbed on lead.

Lean, keen learning machine
(Up to grade 18 / 6a / 5.10a)

 
At this stage of your climbing, you are still developing your repertoire of all the different climbing movement engrams (movement patterns in your brain). So it's vital you get out on rock as often as possible, on as many different rock types as possible so you are exposed to lots of different types of movement.

Because you are new to climbing, you don't really need to do any significant training beyond getting out on rock regularly. If you're a bit overweight or unfit, by all means engage in swimming, jogging, riding or other aerobic activity to increase your general fitness and shed any unwanted weight. Aggressive training such as campussing or hangboarding should be avoided, because it takes several years for the tendons and other connective structures to build the strength required to support your rapidly strengthening finger and forearm muscles that develop from climbing. Ensure any training you do is progressive (i.e. builds up gradually). A drunken chin-up contest might be just the thing to blow out your elbows.

Often climbers at this level go out and do two or three routes in a session. The single best thing you can do is aim to increase the number of routes you do in a session. Be the person who always says "Just one more climb!"

Steve Ioannou enjoying Mother Butterfly 5.10a, Butterfly Valley, Cat Ba Island, Vietnam.

Not a beginner, not a pro

(From grade 18 / 6a / 5.10a up to grade 22 / 6c / 5.11a)

 
This makes up the majority of non-Spanish climbers :) The most common grade climbed by climbers worldwide is 6a. At lot of people never break out of this bracket their entire climbing career.

This is the land of the plateau. And to break out of a plateau, the recipe is to stop doing the same thing every week! That is, increase your training load. You do this by increasing the intensity or volume of moves per session, or decreasing the rest between tries.

I also find that climbers in this bracket are often comfort zone climbers, in that they rarely venture beyond the climbing where they feel completely in control and are comfortable. Unfortunately, this is a recipe for digging yourself into a happy rut. I'm guessing you also don't take falls regularly either. Now might be time to read up on my Fear of Falling article and aim to conquer this.

If you would like to improve and push beyond this bracket, the following diagram suggests how you should be directing your climbing. Basically, it shows that you should be spending more time on harder routes! Simple eh?

Using your climbing time well
Apportioning your climbing time to maximise improvement opportunities
Alexandre Lemieux enjoying the sun on an unnamed 6c on El Delfin, Rodellar, Spain.


Now we're getting serious
(From grade 23 / 7a / 5.11d up to grade 26 / 7b+ / 5.12c)

 
If you're at this level, you're already training. You're excited to be breaking into what is considered truly hard climbing by most. The routes that are open to you now are some of the best and most enjoyable in the world.

It takes most climbers years to move through this bracket of grades. Take the time to build your base. Tick off two to four 7a's before moving on to attempt your first 7a+, and so on. Constantly backfill your grades. By the time you attempt your first 7b, you should have four to eight 7a's under your belt. Build a solid foundation on which to progress. This is what we call building a pyramid (read this article).

Often, the issue here that you are an advanced climber stuck with the self-confidence of a intermediate climber. It's here where climbers often stay well within their comfort zone, ticking off multiple laps on 7b's, without the gumption to back themselves and have a serious go at some 7c's. Be process focused; realise that it may take some time to work through a hard project and enjoy the process (rather than being overly focused on the outcome). You'll gain a lot from it, not just physically but also psychologically.

Suzie Christensen flashing the superb License To Climb 7b, The Face, Ha Long Bay, Vietnam.
 
Tendons of steel

(27 / 7c / 5.12d and up)


So you're already an advanced climber. If you're Australian, you're in the top 10% of Aussie climbers, but this is where progress can become difficult. The biggest mistake at this level is that we tend to fall into the habit of working our strengths, particularly in training. We "got good" training at this particular wall, so that's where we stay. We cottoned on to doing circuits and and it really helped, so we keep doing them. You can see the issue here, the body simply adapts to the training load and improvement grinds to a halt.

So mix it up. If you're an endurance specialist, do a month of bouldering. If you are projecting sport routes, go and do some moderate trad for a few weekends. You'll be surprised what this will do for your climbing, and your motivation and psyche.

The other issue at this level is that we know we have to increase training load but we're already doing what seems to be a lot of training, and so we are risking possible injury by overdoing it. This is where you want to train smarter rather than harder. Continually tweak your training variables to ensure very good quality of training rather than large amounts of dubious quality thrashing. Read up on periodization and perhaps try to design yourself a program.

Continually assess and address your weaknesses. Determine why you fall every time. Be brutal with your self assessments. Ask your belayer and training partners for feedback on your movement. Understand that your performance is always in a state of flux and that this is natural. Listen to your body. When it feels right, go for it. If you're feeling average, scale things back to allow for recovery.

Ethan Pringle firing the first ascent of China's hardest route, Spicy Noodle 5.14d
Hopefully this article has given you some renewed focus for your training. Compared to other popular sports (e.g. track and field, swimming, soccer etc.), climbing training has a long way to go and there are still lots of opportunities for experimentation to see what works for you. Have fun with it!

Ask The Coach #4: To consolidate, or grade-hunt?

The latest issue of my Ask The Coach column is now out in ROCK Magazine Winter 2011. Grab a copy, it's worth it for the cover alone. A brilliant Simon Carter image of Lee Cossey on one of the best looking new routes Australia's seen in a decade (Sneaky Snake 33/8c, Taipan Wall, Grampians, Australia).

As for my article, well, it delves into that age old debate about whether it's best to quest after the next grade at all costs, or consolidate a base at each grade before moving up the ladder. We take a special look at Adam Ondra and riff about specialists vs generalists in climbing.

As always, I'm looking for training-related questions to answer in future installments, so please email them through (upskillclimbing AT gmail.com). The next question chosen for publishing wins a copy of the upcoming Australian climbing flick Smitten on DVD. I don't get many questions, so if you ask a good question you're in with a big chance.

While we're at it, why not bite the bullet and subscribe to ROCK? For the price of a low-end quickdraw (in Australia anyway!), four issues will just show up in your mailbox. What a nice surprise.

Ask The Coach #4. Click to enlarge like Adam's hair.

45 degree climbing holds - Upskill/ICP collaboration

I recently expanded my home climbing wall, adding a big 45 degree wall. It was the one key angle I had been missing. When I went through my hold collection to see which holds were most suitable for going on the 45 I discovered a bit of a pattern. Holds were either too big and juggy and I could campus on them. Or they were too small or slopey to do anything other than bump off or compress with because they were actually designed for less steep walls. And pinches. God, it seemed like everything I put on the 45 turned into a pinch. I have 500+ holds to choose from on my woody, and yet I struggled to find small, powerful edges that would work correctly on the 45 (edges which worked on my 30 and 40 degree walls often weren't good enough for the 45). So I started shaping some holds out of wood and they are great, if a tad unrefined :)

I was then approached by Rob from Indoor Climbing Productions (a very cool, local climbing hold company) who suggested I have a try at shaping up some holds using molding clay. That was quite a learning process! I knew what I wanted, but sculpting it in clay was something else entirely. Anyway, after some trial and error I shaped my first set, and Rob set about taking my initial designs and crafting the holds. I am stoked with the result. The holds climb fantastically. Some of them are little flat one-pad edges (great for powerful, long movements) and others are fiendish half pads which really require some power. Have a look at the pics:

Holds shaped in clay

The finished set!!
One pad
One pad, a micro jug
My favourite hold. You can use it on every orientation. Half pad.
Very powerful half pad hold. Love this one.
Little dogbone, less incut but bigger active surface.
So if you have a steep home climbing wall and are keen to check these out, you can pop over to Upskill Climbing Gear and grab a set. Make sure you give me some feedback too. I will be keen to shape and design some more goodies over the coming months.

The Upskill 45degree Edge Set
$40.00 $34.95

Ueli Steck Climbing Training Plan

Ueli Steck
© Robert Bosch
Climbing just published a story taking a look at the fitness of alpinist Ueli Steck. As far as climbers go, it would be difficult to imagine someone with greater fitness than Ueli. I mean this is the guy who literally sprinted up the Eiger in 2 hours, 47 minutes in 2008. Only a year earlier, the Swiss Federal Institute of Sports Magglingen judged Steck 'out of shape'. In his quest for setting the fastest speed record he could, what followed was a year of the most scientific and rigorous training Steck could devise supported by a slew of sports scientists and training specialists.

Here is just a selection of his training plan.

Get psyched!

FOCUS: ALPINE ENDURANCE (PRE-EIGER RECORD)
  • MONDAY 

    1 hour running–Intensity 2 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour stabilization (core) training / slideshow
  • TUESDAY 

    2 hours running–Intensity 2 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training / slideshow
  • WEDNESDAY
    
4 hours climbing in the gym / 2 hours running–Intensity 1 / 1/2 hour stretching / slideshow
  • THURSDAY
    
4 hours climbing in the gym / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training / slideshow
  • FRIDAY
    
1.5 hours running–Intensity 1 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training / slideshow
  • SATURDAY 

    3.5 hours running–Intensity 4 / 1 hour stretching / slideshow
  • SUNDAY (REST DAY)
    
Climbing with my wife 4 hours / 1 hour stretching

FOCUS: YOSEMITE CLIMBING (2010, WEEK 17)
  • MONDAY 

    Run: 12 kilometers/1,000 meters gain–Intensity 2
  • TUESDAY
    
Climbing outdoors: 3 pitches of 5.13d, 2 of 5.13a, 1 of 5.11d / 1 hour weight training / 1 hour stretching
  • WEDNESDAY
    
Climbing outdoors: 4 pitches of 5.14a, 2 of 5.13a / Run: easy 12 kilometers/800 meters gain–Intensity 1
  • THURSDAY 

    Run: Eiger Lauper Route, running and climbing from Grindelwald, 20 kilometers/3,075 meters gain–Intensity 3
  • FRIDAY (REST DAY)
  • SATURDAY 

    Climbing in the gym: 4 pitches of 5.13b, 3 of 5.12d, 5 of 5.12b, 6 of 5.11d / 1 hour weight training / 1 hour stretching
  • SUNDAY
    
Run: 18 kilometers/1,700 meters gain–Intensity 2

FOCUS: GENERAL ENDURANCE (2010, WEEK 33)
  • MONDAY (REST DAY)
  • TUESDAY 

    3-run series, total 27 kilometers/ 5,100 meters gain–Intensity 3 / 1 hour stretching
  • WEDNESDAY
    
Climbing gym: 3 pitches of 5.13b, 4 of 5.13a, 6 of 5.12c, 4 of 5.11d / 1 hour stretching
  • THURSDAY
    
Climbing gym: 3 pitches 5.13b, 5 of 5.13a, 6 of 5.12b, 6 of 5.11d / 1 hour stretching
  • FRIDAY
    
3-run series, total 27 kilometers/ 5,100 meters gain–Intensity 3 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training
  • SATURDAY
    
Climbing outdoors: 2 pitches 5.13d, 1 of 5.12c, 3 of 5.11d
  • SUNDAY (REST DAY)
    
Drive to Dolomites

FOCUS: HIMALAYA (2011, WEEK 2)
  • MONDAY
    
1 hour running–Intensity 2 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour stabilization training / slideshow
  • TUESDAY
    
2 hours running—Intensity 2 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training / slideshow
  • WEDNESDAY
    
4 hours climbing in the gym / 2 hours running–Intensity 1 / 1/2 hour stretching / slideshow
  • THURSDAY
    
4 hours climbing in the gym / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training / slideshow
  • FRIDAY (REST DAY)
    
1.5 hours running–Intensity 1 / 1 hour stretching / 1 hour mental training / slideshow
  • SATURDAY
    
3.5 hours running–Intensity 4 / 1 hour stretching / slideshow
  • SUNDAY (REST DAY)
    
Climbing with my wife 4 hours / 1 hour stretching
The Eiger's hardest free route, Paciencia (5.13b), a 27-pitch line on the right side of the north face.
© Robert Bosch

The importance of remembering sequences in climbing

On our coaching camps we talk a lot about visualisation, the importance of remembering sequences and what should be running going through your mind as you climb your route (your internal dialogue). If you are one of those climbers who only climbs intuitively "I'll just figure it out as I go along" you are sabotaging your true potential. Seriously!

This video of our man Joey Kinder is a great insight into the level of detail required when you are memorising your sequences.


Here are some visualisation and memorisation tips:

  1. Sit at the bottom of the route, close your eyes and climb the route in your mind. If you get to a bit you can't remember, open your eyes, look up, get it sorted and start over.
  2. If it helps you, give specific holds names i.e. "the brick" or "the contact lens".
  3. Imagine vividly how each hold will feel on your skin.
  4. Like Joe, visualise how each finger will sit on each hold, particularly if it's a subtle or tricky grip.
  5. Don't just concentrate on hand sequences. On difficult routes you must also know 100% what you are doing with your feet and what your body positions are. This represents heaps of data and might be very hard to memorise, but you simply have to do it. Start with the hands, but begin to expand your mental program to foot movements and body positions to make the sequence more and more detailed and realistic.
  6. Get your climbing partner to quiz you. Mime to them the entire sequence, talking it through as you go. Moving your arms and feet is very helpful.
  7. Sometimes there will be a section, or a subtlety you will continue to forget on route. Come up with a trigger phrase like "Stand tall" or "Pull in right hand" or simply (as is often the case) "Breathe!" and have your belayer yell this at you at the appropriate time. When you are running through the route in your mind, think about that section, and say the trigger phrase to yourself. Do that multiple times. Really embed it deeply. You'll find you'll begin to remember the section very well.
  8. If you are a visual person, compile a route map. This is a sheet of paper where you draw the route, the holds, mark L hand and R hand, draw little arrows, mark clipping holds etc. If you can do this accurately for the entire route, you are well on your way to having a good sequence locked in your memory. Now let's hope your sequence is the most efficient one :)
My climbing partners and I have previously noted that on our hardest sends we have to be like a climbing robot. The program is set and it is all a matter of executing perfectly. There should be no decisions made on route - none! The program is written. Simply execute.

Happy projecting!

Joey getting his bling on at the annual Rifle clean-up. © L Cujes 2010

Ask The Coach #3: Training for non-trainers!

My third installment of Ask The Coach is now out in ROCK Magazine Autumn 2011. Go get yourself a copy - it's a good issue.

It's all about training for people who don't want to train. We're all busy. Some of us don't have time choose not to make time for more training. So, if you want to get better without devoting any more time, I give you some ideas on how to do it.

My lovely wife Sam scored her first photo (in front of the lens) in a climbing magazine as the background for the article -- happy!

As always, I'm looking for training-related questions to answer in future installments, so please email them through (upskillclimbing AT gmail.com). The next question chosen for publishing wins The Pinnacle DVD.

ROCK Magazine - Ask The Coach column #2

My second installment of Ask The Coach is now out in ROCK Magazine Summer 2011.

If you've wondered why some climbers seem to get really good really fast, take a look.

And as always, I'm looking for training-related questions to answer in future installments, so please fire them through :)

Click to enlarge

Paul Robinson hangboard workout

American Paul Robinson is one of the world's best boulderers right now being only one of two people to have climbed proposed V16, and he's posted up on his blog one of his typical hangboard workouts. Obviously this is going to be more advanced that most people can handle, but it might give you a few ideas on exercises you can perform on the board. Have fun, and watch those elbows!

 P-Rob's Workout
A few people have inquired about what I do on the hang board for my workouts. It pretty simple considering there is not too many extreme workouts you can perform on a hang board; use the picture below for reference. So here is a single workout I do (sometimes times a day). I start each workout by hanging on the upper jugs of the hang board for maybe 10-15 seconds or so. To continue the warm up I do 10 pullups on the lowest of pinches (very positive and not tweaky on the fingers at all).

Next it is one arm lock offs on the same pinches. I start with both hands on the pinches do a pull up and let go with my right hand first holding with my left arm in a locked off position for 10 seconds. I then do this with the right hand for 10 second and then again with the left for 10 seconds and then one last time with the right for 10 seconds. Without coming off I campus to the upper jugs do a pullup and bring my knees up into an L hang. I hold that for 10 seconds and then lower my arms to a 90 degree angle and hold for another 10 seconds before finally dropping off.

Next it is more L hangs. I grab the slopers directly below the jugs do a pull up, hold an L hang for 10 seconds, bring my arms to 90 degrees hold it for ten seconds, and then repeat this 3 more times without leaving the L hang position or letting go of the slopers.

Then it is 10 pull ups on the smallest two finger pockets followed by 10 pullups on the bad pinches on either side of the board. Then I go to my other board and do 10 pullups on the smallest crimps, 10 pull ups on the biggest crimps, and 10 pullups in the middle slopers.

After this it is back to the blue board again. This is the most difficult part to explain so bear with me. I start with both hands on the good pinches down low. I campus first with my right hand to the crimp rail on the middle of the board then with my left hand to the jug at the top. Then right hand to the jug. Hang, then bring left hand to same crimp rail, campus back down into the pinches with both hands and repeat this 3 more times switching which hand goes to the crimp rail first. And then finally I do 10 pullups on the first good pinch and then campus to the jug and do 10 more pullups and by that time am pretty exhausted and can barely crutch back into the house!

If you have any questions regarding this or are completely confused feel free to comment and ill try and answer you the best I can.

Why you shouldn't build a campus board

Thinking of building a campus board? Please read this...

My article How to build a campus board is the most popular piece of content on my site. It drives more traffic to Upskill Climbing than any other article. And I feel bad about that. Why?

Because you shouldn't be campussing.

Wolfgang Gullich was climbing 8c+ and pushing world standards into 9a when he developed the campus board. He needed to develop specific levels of recruitment for the one and two finger pockets of Action Direct and other pocketed Frankenjura testpieces. And we all idolize Wolfy. So climbers around the world saw him build a board, and we copied him.

The issue is that Wolfy identified his prime weakness (recruitment) and built a device to train this. For him, this was the right thing to do. But for you - I doubt it. As a climbing coach, I can say that I have not met one climber in the last three years for whom recruitment is their prime weakness. Campus boarding will not help.

The repetitive movements do not transfer well to real climbing. And campussing is dangerous to boot. It's about the most dangerous training method there is. Most people think it's the fingers that suffer, but in most cases it's the elbows and shoulders.

What should you do instead?

If it's finger strength you're after, build up slowly on the hangboard, or do short, steep bouldering. Bouldering is useful because the moves incorporate real climbing, where you develop technique as well as strength.

It's time to turn our backs on the campus board. Unless you climb 8c and are gearing up for the Frankenjura!

See also:
The four things you need to train and aren't
and
What do I need to train? And how!?

How Christmas killed the climber

Have you ever noticed that when you take a break from climbing (or exercise in general), it becomes harder and harder to get motivated to start again?

I just had three weeks off over Christmas. Between being out of the state, away from home, other family obligations, then being sick for a week, the time flew by. With me getting grumpier by the day (climbing/exercise is definitely linked to happiness). I told myself I didn't mind because the weather was crap (hot and/or raining). But now here I am and it's time to get moving again. And it's a struggle!

It's tempting to think "I'll just wait till all this dies down and I have some time to train again". When really, the best thing to do is go down to the gym and snatch a quick session. Something is always better than nothing. During this time, you need to mentally shift into "maintenance mode" rather than "performance mode" and realise that it doesn't take much training for the body to maintain its current level, but it does take a lot of work to increase that level.

Even if conditions are crap, you're busy, or have a face full of ham, it's better to do the odd short, mediocre session now, than let a month slip by without doing anything. Honest, you'll thank me later. Now scram - go train!

Video: Dave MacLeod training on his home wall

Here's a recent video of training guru Dave MacLeod training on his home wall. Dave says "1 hour on my board equals about 2 in a climbing wall and 4 outdoors." He also notes that with the volume he's doing (i.e. every day) he's treading a fine line between training hard and getting injured.

Vid: Rich Simpson's 'Obsession' with Action Direct 9a

Grab a coffee, sit down for 26 minutes and enjoy this. If you're into training and hard sport climbing, this won't fail to get you psyched.

Obsession from Chris Doyle on Vimeo.

Watch Tommy train. And talk about stuff.

Everyone knows Tommy Caldwell. He chopped a bit of his finger off (for weight saving?) but climbs like a man possessed. He seems to do everything well (bouldering, sport climbing, trad, bigwall), and because of this and his seemingly neverending supply of motivation, he is the man at the forefront of freeing massive routes on El Cap. Here, thanks to Cedar Wright we get a glimpse into some of the training he does.

A Day in The Life of Tommy Caldwell from Cedar Wright on Vimeo.

Protein after climbing for muscular recovery

I think this is my first post on nutrition. It's an important topic, and one I'll do a bit more on in the future.

Ever had a training session so intense that your muscles felt beat up the next day? Well, our Upskill sessions typically are this intense. So, what can we do to improve our recovery, and increase our strength gains?

The idea is to consume a protein serve (especially with branched chain amino acids [BCAA]) within 15 minutes of the session ending. This can be in powder, bar or tablet form. At the moment, I'm using a protein powder which is marketed for 'recovery'. Go to your health food store and ask for some options around a muscular recovery supplement. Try (in vain?) not to get overwhelmed with the options. Avoid anything marketed for weight gain or bulking!

Our training is intense, and muscles will naturally want to catabolize (rupture and tear). This protein hit directly following the session helps to prevent this and will improve your muscular recovery (you'll feel better the next day). I actually take along my protein serve to the cliff and have it after my last hard route of the day. Helps keep the hunger at bay too, until I can make it to the shop at Kalbar for icecream healthy snacks.

Let me know (in the comments) what you find, or if you already have a favourite recovery supplement.

What about Carbohydrates?

Protein is important, but you also need to replenish carbohydrate stores, and here are some example of suitable post-workout food...
Male Climber
(Target 60-80 g carbohydrate)
Female Climber
(Target 40-50 g carbohydrate)


  • *200 g fruit yoghurt + jam sandwich
  • *200 g fruit yoghurt + cereal bar + 250 ml juice
  • *200 ml liquid meal supplement + 1 large banana
  • *sports bar + 500 ml sports drink
  • *200 ml flavoured milk + cereal bar + banana
  • 750-1000 ml sports drink


  • *200 g fruit yoghurt + cereal bar
  • *200 g fruit yoghurt + banana
  • *200 ml liquid meal supplement
  • *sports bar
  • *200 ml flavoured milk + cereal bar
  • 750 ml sports drink
  • *indicates a valuable source of protein, vitamins and minerals in addition to carbohydrate. Additional fluid such as water, sports drink, juice, cordial or soft drink will also be necessary.

    Other resources:
    General nutrition post by Kris Hampton, Power Climbing Company